By Nicola Acutt, Vice President, Environmental, Social and Governance, VMware
SOURCE: VMware
DESCRIPTION:
When I was about 10 years old, my parents took me on a hike into the hills near our home in Johannesburg, South Africa. We climbed until we reached a clearing looking out over the city. Iโd never seen it that way beforeโboth sprawling and small at the same time.
My eyes were drawn to a brown haze hanging over the skyline, so I asked my dad what it was. After he told me it was pollution, I said: โWhen I grow up, Iโm going to build a giant vacuum cleaner that sucks all of that pollution out of the sky.โ
Iโll be the first to admit: I havenโt built the vacuum. Yet. I still sometimes find myself thinking about how it could be done. But Iโve never lost my connection to that girl on the hill. The one who could envision a future that was different from today, and who wanted to do her part to make it possible.
Fast forward to the moment we are in today. The release of theย latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reportย last week is a stark and unequivocal call-to-action for the world. While not unexpected, the reportโs conclusions are sobering, even to those of us who have committed our lifeโs work in pursuit of sustainability. In moments like this, staying grounded in โour personal whyโ can be a powerful catalyst. ย
For me, this is to imagine how empowered that girl would be to see me now: a woman working at one of the most innovative tech companies in the world, leading its first Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) office, determined to make a difference by driving anย ambitious agendaย that aims for nothing short of creating a more equitable, sustainable and resilient world.
In the decade that Iโve worked at VMware, Iโve seen corporate responsibility evolve from being peripheral to the company to being a part of everything at the company. Today, ESG at VMware isnโt a program or initiativeโitโs a complete realignment in how we think about the long-term future of our business.
Whatโs behind this seismic shift? First and foremost, ESG is an overdue business imperative. And while the events of 2020 brought an increased global awareness, the challenges facing our world escalate. It has now become more evident than before that our lives, our business and our communities are interconnected in ways both large and small.
This interdependence means that ESG is also foundational to any businessโ resilience and future success. Potential investors, customers and employees arenโt only looking for healthy balance sheets, innovative products and great benefit programs anymore. They want to know what you stand forโand how what youโre doing creates value for people and the planet. And theyโre using what they find out to make funding, buying and employment decisions.
Late last year, VMware announced its commitment to ESG with theย 2030 Agenda: 30 specific, measurable goals weโll achieve by 2030 that will:
- Broaden trust in VMware and its products, people, and industry leadership by focusing on security, keeping peopleโs information safe, working from a privacy-first mindset, and being transparent about how we do business.
- Increase equity by enabling our company and our customers can create a distributed and digital workforce future that is accessible, inclusive, and just for all.
- Drive sustainability by decarbonizing IT infrastructure for our customers and partners, as well as our own operations and supply chain.
The most important thing about these commitments is that they wonโt just impact what we do at VMware. Weโre baking them into the products we make and the solutions we offer our customers. In this way, we are contributing to support our stakeholders make progress on their ESG goalsโlike our own Fibonacci spiral amplifying our impact even further.
The 2030 Agenda is ambitious. Iโll be the first to admit it. Achieving our goals will take relentless focus and require not only commitment from the top but also that of our 35,000+ employees around the world. But Iโm confident weโll get there. Because we must get there.
I sometimes think about the girl on the hill and her vacuum. Itโs family lore at this point: the moment my passion sparked, and my path was set. But more often, I think of my son. Heโs a few years older than I was when I first dreamed of the cleaner, better future I wanted for the world. Now, I dream of the safer, more equitable and climate-resilient future I want for him. I know itโs within our graspโwe just have to seize it.
In the coming weeks, Iโll take a deeper dive into the three pillars of VMwareโs 2030 Agenda: sustainability, equity and trust. Until then, why is ESG personal to you?
Follow Nicola:
- Onย Twitter:ย @NicolaAcutt
- On LinkedIn:ย Nicola Acutt
KEYWORDS: NYSE: VMW, VMware
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